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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  June 25, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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in the trump administration. michael goodwin from the "new york post." i have just gotten word that lawrence jones is in position. "cross country" is next. ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪
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♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ ♪ if. ♪ ♪ will: we begin this morning with a fox news alert, the wagner chief who threatened a march toes moscow, an open rebellion, has how now backed down. pete: belarus reportedly
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brokered the deal that will allow jeff again withny prigozhin to go into exile and end that internal conflict for now. rachel: alexandria hoff is live in washington, d.c. with the latest. good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. prigozhin has been paired of the criminal mutiny charges that were against him, and russia avoided a rebellion that was on rack to spark a possible civil war. the wagner group had made it within 125 miles of moscow before prigozhin announced the group would pull back to avoid bloodshed. the kremlin later announced the warlord could leave for belarus without penalty for his mercenaries, and speaking out against russian military leadership. prigozhin formalized the withdrawal. >> translator: they regarded to dismantle pmc wagner. this a day we walked for nearly 200 kilometers away from moscow. in this time we did not spill a
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single drop of blood on our fighters. now the moment has come when blood may still, that's why understanding the respondent for spilling russian blood, we are turning back our convoys and going back to the field camp according to our plan. >> reporter: according to a spokesperson for secretary of state blinken, quote, support of the united states for ukraine will not change. and russian officials offer in this, quote, we've warned the western countries against any hint of possible use of the domestic russian situation to achieve their russia-phobic goals. all goals and objectives of the special military operation will be fulfilled. now, prigozhin's qualms had been building for months as his fighters battled awe alongside the russian military in ukraine, becoming increasingly vocal that the forces were not receiving the support needed from defense leadership. according to "the new york times," senior u.s. officials actually received indication on
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wednesday that the wagner group was preparing to the take action but kept silent fearing that putin would accuse the u.s. of orchestrating a coup. former moscow ciing a station the chief dan hoffman weighed many in on what's next for vladimir putin. >> this is a dangerous time for him, and i can tell you from my experience in the intelligence community and the lessons we learned from the '91 failed coup against gorbachev, you know, we've got to have con tin general city planning here. russia's hold on nuclear weapons, if someone were to the gain access to the nuclear weapons, there's a lot ott stake here right now. whenever there's instability in russia, the world risks paying a price for it. >> reporter: president biden yesterday was on the phone with nato allies in germany, france and britain. he's expected to return back from camp david today. guys? will: thank you, alexandria. rachel: so dan hoffman saying it's a dangerous time for russia, it's a dangerous time for everybody. these are the kind of unexpected
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things that can happen, you know, in a war like this. and, you know, russia has probably the most nuclear warheads of anyone in the world unless you add up all of nato's. and if this is a -- instability in russia means instability for the world. pete: yeah. it was stag orerring yesterday to watch -- i was at at a baseball game, but i turned to my son, i want to see an update, and that was right about the time the message had gone out that they were turning around on their way to moscow. it a appears to have been a sincere geefns from this rogue general saying my troops are not being supported in the field, so i'm going to take over the military installation in southern russia and march to moscow. and they were 200 kilometers out. they were halfway there if you look at that map. and it appears at the moment when he would have been met with actual resistance, actualing fighting, actual russian on russian violence is when he turned back.
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reportedly going to the exile. i don't know what that means after you've challenged a dictator -- rachel: in belarus. pete: how long you with live, what's the future of that group, how does he consolidate his power, vladimir piewrnghts a lot of questions inside russia. will: i understand the -- that it appears to be a grievance, but it simply does not add up. pri prigozhin was not, is not a man with, i would suspect, flights of fancy. he commands an army of well over 2525 the ,000 -- 25 the ,000 soldiers across the globe who's been on the front lines for russia for quite some time. i just don't see how he would momentarily take up -- and we know that he didn't, because u.s. intelligence knew a week or two beforehand this was going to the take place -- take up and drive to moscow with no aerial support, take on minimal fire, there may have been some loss of
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life along the way, and then pull the plug all of a sudden. and it just doesn't add up to me, pete. i don't have answers for you on what this was about, could this have been a false flag operation, you know, many service of vladimir putin? it doesn't look like that that right now. "the wall street journal" is saying a that russia's in disarray, and it creates a moment of uncertainty for china. you can see the headline right here. and that this is not good for russia, and i think that everyone greece on the surface that appears to be -- greeces on the -- agrees on the surface that's case. rachel: we saw antony blinken say, you know, full speed ahead on the war in ukraine and on funding this and no, you know, no talk at all about, look, this thing is unstable, let's try and get a peace accord, let's try and bring this down. no talk at all about those kinds of negotiations. some people saying, of course, that this weekend -- weakens
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putin and that this isn't good for china, that china's seeing this and they're not liking it. donald trump said yesterday, actually, this benefits china. not sure about the rationale on that, but another thing he talked about with china was the fact that joe biden is beholden because of the money that he's taken from china and the money he's taken from ukraine, that he's beholden to the leaders of both countries. listen to this. >> these countries know every penny the biden crime family has taken in. the countries know. ukraine knows, china knows, they all know. there are many countries. so he can't even ever go against them. he can't go against them, because they'll reveal the corruption, and a a huge success will be when "the new york times" and the washington post and others put it on their front page, what's really happening here. because this is truly 100 # times bigger than watergate. this is a much bigger story than
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watergate. that's why biden doesn't mind that china has opened up these military installations and in the process of building a tremendous amount in cuba. it's only 90 miles off our coast. he's basically said it's okay. he's not doing anything. he's not even saying anything. he's not talking about it. pete: yeah, i think that's the most unsettling part about moment. whether it's china and taiwan or what's happening in russia, we don't know what's happening or why it's happening. your instinct the, your gut tells you i don't trust that my own government is acting for my best interests. and for the best interests of all those who love it and the guy at the top may be making decisions that benefits him and a small circle of his family -- will: or may have made those decisions in the past and now is paying the price for those decisions. rachel: which is why when you think about the 50 # excellence officers who signed that --
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intelligence officers who signed that letter ahead of the 2020 to election, you have to go, this was so, frankly, treasonous to do this. because it was important for the american people to know what was on that laptop, to understand what the financial ties were of somebody they were considering to vote for president of united states ahead of that election. it is election interference. but not just because one party wins and the other doesn't, because right now we see ourselves in so much danger, in so much instability. and as you said, pete, we absolutely don't know whether our president is compromised or not. and in the case as donald trump just said yesterday at the faith and freedom conference, you know? we just don't know. those countries know what he did, and they may be pulling the strings. will: we'll see what the news cycle does this week and whether or not attention will remain on the -- pete: that's a really good question. will: you know, there was somer if or very -- fervor on friday
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where they acknowledged the potential compromise of an influence if peddling scheme, but it would be fascinating to go back. if they go forward this week with some level of integrity to look back and say why are you so so fascinated about hunter's sex life? why are you sofas may noted by these naked picture of hunter in do you remember that line? pete: i remember that. will: there was a moment where they attempted to wave their hand at it as though you want to put soft porn on the internet, meaning naked pictures of hunter, when the story was always about joe biden. rachel: that's why we keep saying it's hunter biden's laptop story and on this show at least we were trying to say it's not about hunter. it's easy to get distracted by the sex and the porn and the baby mamas and everything else, but it really is about joe biden. pete: yesterday will and i talked about the implications, the ramifications of the one-year, it's been one year
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since the overturning of roe v. wade, and pro-life advocates celebrating while the other side of the aisle, pro-abortion advocates, held a rally in washington, d.c. yesterday. and, of course, kamala harris showed up. this is a portfolio that he has, you know -- she has,s you know, can't handle the border or anything else, so she's going to handle the outrage amongst left-wing activists about the fact that they can't have abortion on demand. here's how she described her reaction at that moment when roe was overturned. watch. >> the day that the supreme court took the constitutional right from the women with of america, i was outraged. in fact, the first person i called was my husband because i could just let it all out with him. [laughter] so going forward, let's not throw up our hands, let's roll up our sleeves. pete: sorry, i thought it was at the rally. it was a video he posted on twitter. you know, that seemed sincere. of i don't know.
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rachel: yeah, i think, listen, she is pro-highs. joe biden is -- pro-choice. joe biden is the president and even though he's a catholic and carries rosary beads and all that stuff, this is the most radical pro-abortion administration in u.s. history. they have gone even further than barack obama. it's hard to believe. yesterday i spent time with a group called live action, and and they are a pro-life organization that has done so much to change people's points of view on abortion. and the truth is that when you show people the truth about what abortion is and when you show them a window into the womb there it's through the ultrasound or some of the videos that this group puts forth where they do through pintures and videos -- pictures and videos of the growth of the baby in the womb, the more we know about what happens in fetal development, the more we win. and so on the side for life. i think it's interesting, people do change their mind on abortion
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when they get the facts, and and so much of what the pro-abortion movement has done is to obscure the facts and use euphemisms and words that don't accurately describe what is actually happening inside of the womb. and so i love grouped like this. they've worked for 50 years for that moment they had last year, and it is the a significant moment. and now it's going back to the states where people decide, and people like kamala harris are really angry that the people might get to decide on. will: yeah. for all the the talk of the love of democracy and the need to save democracy, there sure is a lot of hand wringing about one of the most contend juice -- contentious issues is going to return. earlier this week i hosted "fox & friends" with ainsley and brian, is and i did a segment with a voter panel, two women in california talking about homelessness crisis and the crime crisis in california. and is one of them was a moderate democrat voter, self-described moderate democrat
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voter. she said gavin newsom has done an awful job, quality of life, the streets of terrible. and i transitionedded, well, what are your plans for 2024, and her answer was anyone but donald trump. quickly, and i followed up with, why, her answer was abortion. and i said but that's not an issue that will affect your quality of life in california, because it will return to democracy and california will are return to be a pro-choice state. whatever donald trump actually believes about abortion doesn't impact you -- rachel: what did he say? will: i don't care. she doesn't care how it directly affects her life, it is the issue that theoretically and philosophically she will start and stop on. rachel: i can totally that, because people will say to me, for example, there's a lot of discussion about rfk jr. this is a lot of things i like about him. but with i will say i could never vote for him because he is pro-choice. and people saying, well, why, that's just a small -- i was,
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like, you know what? in the election of 1860 #, i would have been -- will: a single-issue voter. rachel: -- against slavery. and in so many ways this issue and that the issue are very parallel. it's a human rights issue that is so fundamental that all other issues go away. so i can actually relate to that lady, i'm just on the other side of that -- pete: i know multiple women that i respect deeply who are, that is their number one issue. on the pro-life side. rachel: yeah. i love a lot of things about him, but donald trump made that anniversary that was celebrated yesterday by the pro-life movement happen. he felt that love at the faith and freedom conference because of of that. pete: yeah. a little different reaction. [laughter] rachel: you think? pete: we're going to turn now to some additional headlines on this sun morning. canadian officials now looking into launching a criminal investigation into the catastrophic implosion of the titan sub. yesterday investigators began collecting the evidence from the main vessel that carried the
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titan into the ocean for its release saying it could have some valuable information. >> vessels of this this size are require to have a voyage data recorder which which records audio that's on the bridge. the content of those voice recordings could be useful in our investigation. pete: it is believed the titan sub imploded while descend ising toward the titanic shipwreck, killing all five people onboard. is and police in florida have started the dismantle structures on an island that was taken over by squatters. the island, which is located near port originals known as meth island on social media, has a four-story tree house and other huts. police say the squatters also installed a trampoline and were building a swimming a pool. will: necessities first. 4r56 laugh. pete: the squatters also install booby traps -- will: of course. pete: -- on the island to keep visitors away.
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that's a lot of productivity for all that -- will: i want a deep dive interview with the residents of meth island. i want to know if those booby traps ever came into play. pete: the will cain podcast -- rachel: live from meth island. [laughter] pete: and in the usfl the pittsburgh maulers move on in the playoffs after an overtime thriller against the michigan panthers. >> gotta have it. perry, and that is deflected right there at the line! pittsburgh, they're headed to the championship! pete: the maulers scored 17 points in the fourth quarter to force overtime where they secure their spot in next weak's championship game. next week's championship game. they'll face either the new orleans breakers or the birmingham stallions -- will: i have some more thoughts on meth island. rachel: me too!
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will: had that be -- been, you know, heroin island, it would have looked like the streets of portland or san francisco if. but meth island, you have got to get some stuff done, we've got projects to do. let's clean this island up and install some trampolines. rachel: and booby traps. one of the things they also did was had some votes, and they voted on changing the name of the island to hunter island. [laughter] pete: 77% chance -- [inaudible] one of those signs. rachel: all right. fox news alert, rail cars containing hazardous material plunging into the yellowstone river in montana. officials share an update as residents are urged to conserve water. will: and measuring bm if i is now deemed racist. the medical journal that's putting a lot of weight behind measuring weight. rachel: everything's racist these days. ♪ why does it hurt so -- feel so good but hurt so bad.
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let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch. is it possible to protect my business from cyber threats? it is, with comcast business.. helping every connected device stay protected. yours. your employees'. even... susan? hers, too. safe. secure. and powered by the next generation 10g network. with comcast business, advanced security isn't just possible. it's happening. get started wih fast spees and advanced security for $49.99a month for 12 monts plus ask how to get up to a $750 prepaid card with qualifying internet. rachel: welcome back. we have a fox news alert for you. a bridge over the yellowstone river in montana collapsing yesterday, plunging freight
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train cars carrying hazardous material into the rushing water below. pete: while officials say there's no immediate danger to residents, they're still asking them to to conserve water for the time being. will: columbus' fire chief is the lead investigator into in this derailment, and he joins us now along with tyrell hamilton. thank you both for being with us this morning. rich, let's start with you in terms of the investigation. i think everyone understands the primary concern is what was in those train cars. how toxic is it in the yellowstone river? >> well, good morning. reality says that, actually, the materials of the train car are asphalt and molten sulfur, so they're actually fairly stable. products once they get into the cool air and cool water, they're actually solidifying, so they're staying relatively close to the incident. so it's going to turn out to be a fairly stable incident. two cars that that some
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hazardous materials actually stayed out of the water, and they're in good shape. rachel: tyrell, we've had train derailments in the news over the last few months, and it's been troubling. what did we learn from those trail derailments, and how did that help in dealing with this crisis that just happened at the yellowstone river? >> yeah, good morning. you know, i think for us we've learned that, you know, the immediate response is what's important. and, you know, from a county perspective protecting public health and safety was the number one priority for us. we were able to mobilize our units, work with state and federal agencies, and from our perspective their response has been great. they've brought with on experts in their necessary fields to headache sure we were able to -- make sure we were able to mitigate the risk. pete: chief, what happened? how did this derailment -- is it a collapsed bridge? what occurred? >> we don't know at this point
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what exactly happened, whether it was a derailment first and then the bridge collapsed or whether the bridge fails prior to the train going across can it. the train made it about halfway across before the derailment occurs, so that's still being investigated to truly figure out what happened. pete: could it be something criminal? >> foul play? anything on the table? >> you know, everything's being looked at. obviously, federal agencies have some folks here taking a look at all possible aspects, but at this point in time we really don't know. will: tyrell, while we understand everything has gone well in terms of the initial response, downstream from where this bridge is on the yellowstone river we have, what, billings? of course -- look, i've been to montana, the yellowstone river's incredibly important as a fishery, in many ways to the community there. so what are the risks we are trying to mitigate against? >> yeah. obviously, the risks are the chemicals interacting with the
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waterway, and so they have environmental specialists on site. we have the deq, epa. they began monitoring right after the incident as soon as they were able to get on scene. and so, you know, our biggest thing is not only drinking water, but we also have irrigation use for crop. use downstream. just making sure monitoring is happening, it's in place, and we're confident that they are doing a good job and that they'll be -- if there's any risk to those users as well as the public that use that for a waterway, that they'll be notified and taken care of. rachel: really quick, is have either of you heard if pete buttigieg has been, you know, in communication with the community leaders on this? >> i have not heard. i don't know if commissioner hamilton has or not. rachel: okay. >> no, i have not heard either. rachel: thank you for that. we're praying that that everything works out. pete: thank you both for your time this morning.
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>> thank you. >> thank you. pete: all right. now to our top story, russian mercenaries ending their march on moscow. we're taking a look at the wagner group after it threatened to challenge putin's power. rachel: and back here at home, air travel warnings. the rollout of 5g wireless signals on july 1st could create a holiday nightmare for travelers. we're going to tell you why. ♪ ♪ they need their lawn back fast and you need scotts turf builder rapid grass. it grows grass 2 times faster than just seed alone. giving you a stronger lawn.
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is -- prigozhin, excuse me. he's the chief and the face of the group and the one we've talked about the most who held the nickname putin's chef after organizing catering for kremlin events. he met putin back in st. petersburg when he was the mayor there, they were thick as thieves, and he's the ones that's put out the videos and statements about what they're doing next. but a lot of men behind him and one is an operational commander who many bereave is the cofounder -- believe is the cofounder of the organization. probably not a guy you'd want to meet in a dark alley. andre -- is said to be the chief of staff, orchestrating operations across africa. this is not just a group operating in ukraine. putin has used the wagner group around the globe to push russian interests. a guy like him is probably keeping the schedule for everybody. and konstantin pikalov,
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operations across africa, i'll just point you to that logo. that's a logo that says we do death and cause problems x these men have done it pretty effectively over the years for vladimir putin. their future right now very unknown. here to discuss is retired brigadier general anthony tata. general, thank you so much for being here. i don't know how familiar you are with all those names and faces in that group, a lot of them new to us here. not pretend thing to be exi perr group, but help us out with what you can speculate about what the future might be. >> hi, pete, good morning. great to be with you. i know the group a fairly well. when i performed the duties of undersecretary of defense for policy, we monitored group. they're in africa can, syria, yeah, around the world really. and they're brutal. all four people that you mentioned right there are former special forces soldiers except for pri goes, of course, who --
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prigozhin, of course, who as you mentioned met putin when he was mayor, deputy mayor, and he ran a restaurant and now he's a billionaire oligarch controlling one of the most significant 40, 50,000-person-strong private military contractor groups in the world. quite frankly, disgruntled as the others were with the ministry of defense. and is so he turned his guns on the m.o.d. more than he do did on putin who's his friended, actually -- friend, and lukashenko. of and i think lukashenko and putin got together and said, hey, we've bot a mini berlin ball moment going on here, we need to sort this out. they snuffed it out pretty quickly, and we have to ask ourselves the question while many are cheering on putin's dilemma,ing we've got to remember there are 3,000 nukes in russia and a destabilized russia is a problematic place to
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be. pete: president general, we've been trying to dissect this, everybody is. you can't get behind the curtain completely, but with do you think more or less what this was, you know, a disgruntled general, he had a lot of his men killed, set up for a higgs they weren't equipped to execute, dissatisfied with the ministry of defense, thought -- took a risk and he had to back down? what do you think is the source of this? >> yeah. so, pete, you know, prigozhin has been telegraphing his dissatisfaction with the ministry of defense, the the logistics for months, six, seven months. he's been on social media making statements saying they're incompetent, they promised me am in addition, food, etc. and so this could very well be a, you know, he's a billionaire oligarch, and he's boots on the ground in ukraine, and it could very well be him taking it to the ministry of defense and saying, hey, look, you're all
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corrupt. i can do this better than you, i am doing it better than you. but let's not forget he is a brutal slaughterer, and pri e ghosn is now -- prigozhin is no better option than putin. it's a real dilemma here that how do we untangle this. and from a vital interest standpoint, how do we keep visibility on the nuclear weapons and really during this chaos, did ukraine exploit the the operational weakness in bahkmut,ed the did we exploit it. pete: yeah, you tell me. it doesn't appear so thus far, but there's still time for things to play out. general, thank you for your time. >> thanks, pete. pete: you got it. all right, we now move to the a fox weather alert. a multivortex tornado touches down in the bid west concern midwest. rick reichmuth is tracking the severe storm threat that is moving east. plus, this chicken was not
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trying to control my asthma felt anything but normal. ♪ ♪ enough was enough. i talked to an asthma specialist and found out my severe asthma is driven by eosinophils, a type of asthma nucala can help control. now, fewer asthma attacks and less oral steroids that's my nunormal with nucala. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred.
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don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. talk to your asthma specialist to see if once-monthly nucala may be right for you. and learn about savings at nucala.com there's more to your life than asthma. find your nunormal with nucala. pete: we're back with a fox weather alert. more extreme summer weather
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yesterday including a large double-vortex tornado. look at that, in minnesota. tornado t warnings continuing throughout the night in the midwest as the region saw severe thunderstorms, heavy rain on the east coast as well as storms pummeled new england. let's turn now to the chief, chief meteorologist rick reichmuth. rick: there have been a lot of tornadoes this month of june, and right now, today we're probably going to see some more. you see this warm air? that's part of the ingredients here. it's been so hot in texas, no relief at all. but this effort, area of disturbance, that's going to bring kind of the fiery weather throughout the day today. one line of storms cutting through indiana and illinois, that will fire again later in the day. a that as move -- as that moveses out, we'll see more thunderstorms. today's storms, tomorrow we have the storm continue to pull off toward the east, but want to notice this for today's tornado threat, especially right here where you see all of these polka
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dots, potential for large tornadoes there. so you're going to the want to watch the closely. that that's going to start in the early afternoon. tomorrow that threat moves farther towards the east, even up towards new york and down towards the carolinas, looking at the potential for severe weather for tomorrow. more tornadoes certainly in store, definitely some really strong winds and large hail as well. rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, rick. so what came first, the chicken or the egg? how about neither? the usda just approved the first lab-grown chicken in the united states. so is this meat alternative grown from cells safe to consume? we're going to the discuss this with the cofounder and the former coca-cola consulting kelly means. kelly, so great to have you on this morning. so this lab-grown chicken sounds really gross, really unhealthy. what can you tell us about what our bodies will react to when we ingest that? >> i think there's a very simple
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thing to understand here. this is like out of a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel. [laughter] we are all getting, americans, getting sicker, fatter, more depressed, more infertile because of ultra-processed food. obviously, rates of diabetes, heart disease are going up. alzheimer's, cancer, many of these diseases we don't even expect are highly tied to food. life expectancy in the if u.s. is almost eight years earlier than people in japan. that's because of food. it's because of ultra-processed food. and the solution to get out of this mess is very simple. we need to invest in our farmers, invest in regenerative agriculture. but instead we're turning to a company funded by bill gates and funded by autocratic regimes in the middle easts that's saying the solution to our problems is literality the epitome of processed food.
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rachel: yeah. you know, it's interesting, you mentioned bill gates, some of the people pushing the stuff are some of the most up healthy looking people ever like bill gates, so why are we listening to them? what is really behind this? i think that the american people understand that our food is -- something's wrong. and people come from other countries to our country, instantly say i can't process the bread that you guys have here, i don't -- i feel sick when i come to your country and eat food that you guys are eating all the time. and if people go to other countries and say i feel so much better when i'm eating foods in other countries, so there's something happening to our food supply. americans want to figure this out, but somehow big food, big pharma, big factory farms, what's happening and what's the motivation behind not fixing this? >> rachel, yeah, working for the food companies, i can tell you -- and this is talked about in those companies -- there's something very profitable about bringing people away from nature and making folks dependent on ultra-processed food which is
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actually make us very sick and then having a pharmaceutical solution. you know, we're getting sicker, you know, more depressed, more infertile as i talked about, and of course there's a pharmaceutical solution for all those conditions. so this is known, there's power in keeping people in fear, there's power in keeping people -- you've said this, this is a sleeper issue this election. we've seen on both sides of the aisle presidential candidates talking about this issue, and i think americans are waking up, but the answer is not lab grown meat funded by gil gate -- bill gates and autocratic regimes. rachel: can we heal ourselvessed food? i think that's what our viewers want to know. >> yeah, so so food intervention really means getting all the ultra-processed food bandwagon. i don't like to give europe that much credit usually, but we have thousands of pesticides and chemicals that are on our food that aren't in any other country. so just having more basic curiosity about natural food going into our bodies not only
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obviously can prevent conditions, but there's research coming out that it actually is the best reversal. just a food intervention, 150 minutes of exercise is better than any antidepressant even for reversing depression, alzheimer's, cancer, diabetes, heart disease, you actually can reverse. that's what we're doing at our company. we need to get back to basics. rachel: by the way, mexico also taking very good care of their food supply and making sure it doesn't go genetic and get in the hands of big food, big formula. thank you so much, calley, such a positive message. food can heal you. thank you. >> thank you, rachel. rachel: okay. will? will: -- just with pete about what we should have for breakfast. it's not going to fit the definition of medicine. [laughter] pete: no. it's not going to heal us. will: thank you, rachel. turning now to your headlines, the rollout of 5g wireless
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signals on july 1st could create a holiday travel nightmare. older planes could be banned from taking off or landing because the 5g signals could interview with radio communications. transportation secretary pete buttigieg saying there's a real risk of delays or cancellations. this represents probably the biggest foreseeable problem affecting performance this summer. the american medical association is now discouraging the bm if i or measurements because they say it's problematic and has been used for racist exclusion. the ama including those comments in a report shared at their annual meeting this month, also saying, quote, bmi cutoffs are based on the imagined i'd day ideal caucasian. those are your headlines. i always get bmi and body fat mixed up. they're -- rachel: so what's -- body mass index. yeah. pete: yeah -- will: what's the difference between those two?
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pete: body fat percentage? don't know. i'm sure it's kind of the difference between a batting average and on an of -- on-base percentage. will: one includes walks. pete: exactly. so one of those includes something that isn't just body fat percentage. will: we'll figure it out. still ahead, schools being sued. the state of new jersey is going after schools that tell parents when their kids switch jenders. -- genders. a frustrated parent reacts next. w evolved form, we carry that spirit with us. because you can take alfa romeo out of italy. but you best believe, you can't take the italy out of an alfa romeo.
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my name is shannon knight, and i own little knights daycare. carolina sports incorporated. a paradise for parents. lomita feed, current caretaker and owner. we did not know anything about the employee retention credit. that is a legitimate tax credit. so innovation refunds has really helped guide me through the process. just had to get a few of my records together, submit that, and they made it as painless as possible. i can't thank innovation refunds enough for what they did.
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will: the state of new jersey is suing three school districts over transgender policies. the district moved to require school faculty to the notify parents in the event their child identifies with different pronouns. the state's attorney general calls discriminatory saying if the policies, quote, will harm kids and pose severe risk to their safety if they go into effect, the state is going to step in and inshower these policies do not take effect. our next guest advocates for parental brights in education. rights in education. new jersey project founder nicki stouffer joins us now. nicki, i understand you do not have kids in the three districts we are mentioning, but you've are within -- already been through this personal
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calculation on your own. what do you know about the parents in these three districts, about this effort that now the attorney general is stopping for parents to be involved in knowing what's going on with their kids in the school district? >> well, the new jersey project is actually a quite large number of parents that have banded together because of what murphy did during the pandemic. he not only masked and tortured our children in public school, but he extended that to private school. so all of these ridiculous mandates could absolutely show up in your private school at anytime. and the parents from these districts are wild because here at the new jersey project we, we went to a lot of trouble -- we have a lot of parentses, we elected 151 board members in 85 districts to new jersey schools to the the enact what we wanted. this is what we want. we want transparency with thing school. our children are are safer when we know more about what's happening in school. why in the world would the a.g. and murphy think that it would be appropriate to hide any sort
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offing information from parents? will: right. >> they think that we are monsters and we would only hurt our kids if we found out they were being bullied -- will: can i -- i just want for the audience to share what the attorney general, because what you're saying is it's safer for parents to know what's happening with their children which seems rational and intuitive. the attorney general saying we will not tolerate any actions by schools that threatens the health and safety of our young people and policies passed by these boards if they go into effect will impose severe harm on our kids. they're saying letting parents know what's happening is a threat to to kids. >> he thinks we're monsters. he thinks that we would torture our kids. we would never torture our kids. we were trying to get the masks off for two years because he tortures our kids. and now that he is losing control of his school boards because we're getting people elected fighting the njea, getting our parentses in to make these kinds of changes, he's going to use the a.g. to make
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sure we can't do these things. he has waged war on -- will: yeah. it's an easy ask for everyone watching, is it safer to know what's happening with your kids or bigger risk to be in the closet? thank you so much for being with us, nicki. >> thank you. will: we've got a big show ahead on this sunday morning so stick with us. ♪ ♪ ...and his. with 24 trusted brands by wyndham to choose from, your wyndham is waiting. get the lowest price at wyndhamhotels.com my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. how to grow delicious herbs: step one: use miracle-gro potting mix. that's it.
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learn how abbvie can help you save. buying a car from vroom is so easy, all you need is a phone and a finger. just go to vroom.com, scroll through thousands of cars. then, tap to buy. that's it. no sales speak, no wasted time. go to vroom.com and pick your favorite. pete: we begin this hour with a fox news alert. the wagner chief who threatened to the march all the way to moscow in open rebellion of russian president vladimir putin has backed down. will: belarus reportedly brokered the deal that will allow yevgeny prigozhin to go into exile and end that internal conflict for now. rachel: alexandria hoff is live in washington, d.c. with the latest. good morning good morning. >> reporter: good morning. prigozhin has been sparedded of charges and russia avoided a civil war, but pilot toens

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